Modification of electronic and chemical properties of single-wall carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) by covalent side-wall functionalization can produce a stable material with purposely-enhanced electronic and optical properties. In the report we describe a new type of reactions between simple aromatic compounds and SWCNTs, creating different fluorescent trapping states in SWCNTs. The photoreactions take place in aqueous suspensions of SWCNTs with small addition of soluble or even very-slightly soluble organic aromatic compounds excited by UV light. The reaction rates depend on the aromatic compound structure and proportional to its concentration, and in some cases, as with aniline or iodoaniline, new strong and well-resolved spectral sidebands appear within one minute. Total SWCNT photoluminescence intensity can increase, and the increase was in some cases by a factor of 5 as compare to original species. The shifted emission bands and the trapping nature of them, when the main part of the nanotube is performing as an absorbing antenna delivering excitation energy to the modified sites, may be interesting for a variety of optical and electronic applications.Most notably, in most cases of these photochemical reactions, the shifted emission spectra from modified SWCNTs become different, displaying never observed previously structure upon removal of molecular oxygen from the solution. For instance, treatment with normal dissolved oxygen gives a rise to a new emission band red-shifted for (6,5) SWCNTs by 160 meV from the pristine position, which is similar to many previously studied reactions starting with oxygen doping. Corresponding results will appear for other species as well. However, if the molecular oxygen is removed from the suspension by degassing or gas substitution, same UV treatments will lead to two different emission bands red-shifted by 140 and 270 meV, one less shifted and one more shifted, thus indicating different chemical products of the reactions. These new bands grow with different rate under UV illumination. Variance spectroscopy of such samples shows the presence of individual “multicolor” nanotubes with three distinct emission bands, one original/unmodified plus two shifted. The reaction demonstrates new possibilities for creation different trapping states on individual nanotubes, and opens new options for tuning electronic and optical properties of nanotubes for possible applications.
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